A few years back, I read a good book on Freemasonry, that my mother-in-law bought me for Christmas. Before that, I don't know, I think it was a different Freemasonry book my mother bought me, but if I add up all the books I've enjoyed reading, it's under 10, and I wouldn't be surprised if it was under 7. That total includes everything I remember reading from grade 1, until now, and the reason? Most books are boring, and long, and if I have a couple of hours to spend doing nothing, why invest that into the pointless journey of bad character development?
In grade 4, I had a meeting with my parents and the teacher (Ms Brown), to discuss why I didn't enjoy reading. My mother was crying (of course), and my father was just there, I don't think he really cared. The teacher was very concerned that during "free reading" I would take short form books and read 10 of them, and then summarize them. My teacher honestly thought I didn't know how to read, and was hiding it. I explained in some paraphrased form that I found reading boring, which caused an immediate reaction, that it was my fault that I found it boring.
What did I find boring about it? The waste of engagement, some sloppy, poorly written character spends 100 pages to get nowhere, and you could have just told me in the first page. That triggered an investigation through Special Education because they still thought I was unable to read, but trying to make excuses. The look on Mrs York's face, Special Ed teacher, when I f'ing crushed the entire assessment, was priceless. I ended up by the assessment reading at a grade 12 level in grade 4 (I have no idea how you judge that). I could and can read, I just don't like long format nonsense, and how many of us are in the same boat? How many of us were told we're at fault because we have different preferences?
The question isn't if you enjoy reading, the question is: What do you read, and can you read? If you can't read, that's another topic, but, if you can read, but don't like reading hundredths of pages, when a ten-page summary would have gotten you to the same place, then what's the problem? How many of us read Slashdot every day? How many of us read source X or Y, in the same format? If one paragraph can get me to click a link to a multipage article, why is that not good enough of a metric?
If you enjoy reading, that's wonderful, but why is it an issue when you don't? Maybe you don't dislike reading, you just don't like reading long format styled work.